Matthew Garrett ([personal profile] mjg59) wrote,
@ 2011-05-18 02:49 pm UTC
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Entry tags:advogato, fedora
Firstly: If you want to buy a computer to run Linux on, don't buy a Mac.
Secondly: If you have a Mac and want to run Linux on it, the easiest approach is going to be to run it under virtualisation. Virtualbox is free, and worth every bit of what you're paying.
Thirdly: If you're going to boot Linux on bare-metal Apple hardware, boot it via BIOS emulation.
Fourthly: If you're going to boot Linux on bare-metal Apple hardware via EFI, and it doesn't work, write a patch. Apple's firmware has a number of quirks that I'm aware of and we're working through them, but anyone filing bugs against Apple hardware on EFI right now is likely to be ignored for a significant period of time until there's an expectation that it'll actually work. Maybe in six months or so.


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I have a Debian Mac ;-)


(Anonymous)
2011-05-19 01:07 pm UTC (link)
I've got a Macbook Pro running Debian Squeeze perfectly, no virtualized. I don't use MacOSX anything!! In fact, MacOSX partition has only 20GB.

Everything runs out of the box, except wifi. I installed Debian using refit, but now I think seriously about erasing MacOSX and changing partition system to DOS.

God bless Debian GNU/Linux!! ;-)

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Re: I have a Debian Mac ;-)


(Anonymous)
2011-05-20 01:59 am UTC (link)
I too installed Debian on a Macbook (black, 2008) and couldn't get wifi working. For me, though, this was unacceptable, so I can only run Debian on the laptop via Virtualbox.

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